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Student’s Name Professor’s Name Course Date Bertrand Russell’s ‘The Value of Philosophy’ What Bertrand Russell meant when he stated that "the value of philosophy is in fact to be sought largely in its very uncertainty" he meant that every person has to consider the critical reasoning of beliefs and occurrences that take place within their environment. He was mainly passing the information that humans have to develop factual reasoning by developing common sense through asking and answering questions by deliberate reasoning. Bertrand Russell goal was to ensure that everyone philosophizes and come up with relevant answers to problems that possibly occurring in our surroundings (Russell p.26). Philosophy has to be invoked through astute reasoning to come up with answers to unfamiliar issues that take place within their set up and find have brought about the issues. Succinctly the lives that people live in addition to the choices that they ascribe to are dictated by the philosophies they are doctrine. Lastly philosophy has the profound influence on our day to day lives. The languages that people speak have derivations from philosophy. The classification of nouns adjectives and verbs concludes that there are differences in things description of objects and actions. Thus the philosophic idea presented is that there are differences in things and actions. By asking the difference then we are starting to engage in a philosophic inquisition. Works Cited Russell Bertrand. History of Western Philosophy: Collectors Edition. Routledge 2013.p.26. Russell Bertrand. Human knowledge: its scope and value. Routledge 2013.p.27. Russell Bertrand. The Philosophy of Bertrand Russell. Tudor Publishing Company: New York 2013.p.29 [...]
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I only need 800 words. Please help me, thank you!
Subject Area: Philosophy
Document Type: Research Paper